Leave supporters mark Remain Ministers down. Remain supporters mark Leave Ministers down. Gove heads the table on our lowest top score ever.
The agreement would cost British taxpayers a fortune and establish free movement of people between Calais and Turkey’s porous border with Syria.
Pro-Leave support piles up for the Mayor, Gove and Fox – leaving Osborne and May with most of the pro-Remain rest.
They might do it, but Scottish Tories must be vigilant against inflating expectations. Staking their best asset on such a long shot was never an option.
Which also means putting the Five Presidents’ Report front of stage.
The consequences of these sleights-of-hand now include two Ministers threatening to resign, PPS’s quitting, and rebellion from up to 50 Tory MPs.
This is our first complete survey since Cameron’s EU deal.
A large part of the reason for the Chancellor backing off is the interplay between the EU referendum and Tory MPs’ views.
The Chairman’s letter promises “additional benefits to enhance the membership experience”. Wouldn’t it be most enhanced by members having a bigger say?
Home working is on the rise. Self-employment is on the rise. Part-time labour is on the rise. Osborne should heed the downsides as well as the benefits.
Two weeks or so down, four months or so to go.
Associations may be wholly merged, rather than simply band together while maintaining control of their own resources.
Corbyn did not dare allude to Conservative divisions over Europe, for fear the Prime Minister would point to Labour divisions over almost everything.
If it fails to publish these figures, people will draw the conclusion that it has something to hide or fears that it has something to hide.
If we exclude the 74 MPs from the Class of 2015 – who have not yet gained such appointments – then the proportion rises to more than 50 per cent.